Seeger honored at 1st folk festival since he died

David Bauder AP Entertainment Writer

Posted:
06/21/2014 11:39:20 AM MDT

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FILE - This Sept. 21, 2013, file photo shows Pete Seeger performing on stage during the Farm Aid 2013 concert at Saratoga Performing Arts Center in Saratoga Springs, N.Y. Seeger?s life will be celebrated at the annual Clearwater Festival June 21-22 at Croton Point Park in Croton-On-Hudson. Seeger died in January at age 94, after surviving his wife Toshi by about seven months. Clearwater Festival organizers say the two-day show at Croton-on-Hudson starting June 21 will celebrate the couple?s legacy. (AP Photo/Hans Pennink, File)

CROTON-ON-HUDSON, N.Y. (AP) — Music luminaries honored Pete Seeger on the shore of the Hudson River at Saturday's Clearwater Festival, the first of the annual music and environmental program he started to be held after his death.

Folk artists Tom Paxton, Tom Chapin, Holly Near, Dar Williams and others performed together to honor Seeger, who died in January at age 94. Sets were planned centered on music of the Weavers and Almanac Singers, both bands that featured Seeger, and highlighting the banjo, which Seeger frequently picked in concert.

Lucinda Williams, Rufus Wainwright, Richard Thompson, the Mavericks, Norah Jones and Josh Ritter are among the headliners at the two-day festival expected to draw around 25,000 people.

"It's up to us to pass the music on as he intended," Chapin sang in a verse written for the occasion in his song, "One Voice."

Seeger began hosting "folk picnics" in the 1960s to pay for building a boat that would travel on the Hudson to highlight environmental issues. Seeger and his wife, Toshi, who died last July, lived in nearby Beacon, in a home with a spectacular view of a bend in the river.

The informal fundraising concerts became the Clearwater Great Hudson River Revival in 1978. In recent years it has settled in a park jutting into the river in this community 35 miles north of New York City and has modernized beyond its folkie roots. With the strong lineup, Seeger remembrances and sunny skies, organizers were expecting their biggest crowd ever.

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Chapin opened the tribute by singing "Midnight Special," a folk song recorded by Seeger and others. Before singing "Rainbow Race," Near urged the audience to remember how Seeger "walked into controversy and made us understand how to do that."

Paxton recalled summoning the nerve to sing his song "Ramblin' Boy" to Seeger in 1963. Two weeks later Seeger performed it with the Weavers at Carnegie Hall, and the song later became the title song to Paxton's first album.

Chapin led the audience in a singalong to "Where Have All the Flowers Gone."

Beyond the collection of folkies, organizer Steve Lurie said several festival events were designed with Seeger in mind. They include an old-fashioned square dance like the one where Pete and Toshi Seeger met. One music set was to feature songs Seeger wrote in honor of Americans who served in the Spanish Civil War.

"My hope is that people who have already been part of the Clearwater community feel a sense of renewal," Lurie said. "I hope people attending for the first time realize we're not just a music festival, we're a music and environmental festival and ... they learn a little bit about the mission."

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David Bauder can be reached at dbauder@ap.org or on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/dbauder. His work can be found at http://bigstory.ap.org/content/david-bauder